Barbed-wire jellyfish (Apolemia uvaria) have invaded two Scottish fish farms, killing nearly 200,000 salmon.
Ariane Burgess of the Scottish Greens claimed that the industrial farm proposed in Loch Long could scatter and endanger ...
MSPs have stopped short of calling for a ban on any expansion in the controversial salmon farming sector despite "slow ...
Trapped in densely packed pens, the salmon are unable to escape the relentless stings, leaving them with gaping wounds and ...
Boom in UK’s biggest food export prompts calls to ‘redouble’ efforts to improve regulation as Holyrood inquiry backs closure ...
Bodø, Norway-based fish-farming firm Gigante Salmon has announced a delay in the development of its land-based flow-through ...
Oven-roasted, hot-smoked or topping a jacket potato, trout is winning favour over salmon for its sustainability and delicate ...
Environmentalists have long raised concerns about the impact of farmed salmon on wild fish MSPs have stopped short of calling for a ban on any expansion in the controversial salmon farming sector ...
Akaroa King Salmon has appointed a new chief executive as its co-founder and CEO retires. Stewart Hawthorn has relocated back to New Zealand from Stirling in Scotland for the role, where he was ...
A lawsuit filed in Maine claims that Cooke net pens are violating the U.S. Clean Water Act by allowing salmon feces, excess food and carcasses to fall to the sea floor.
The String of Pearls Jellyfish (Apolemia uvaria), also known as string jellyfish or barbed wire jellyfish, has struck two Scottish salmon farms, according to The Green Britain Foundation.